But even if you use a hot air station at 350°C, you still have to be very, very careful not to melt plastics.
I keep a supply of modeling clay handy. If there are other components very close to where I'm going to use hot air, I make liitle clay snakes and cover the nearby components. This is mainly to avoid blowing away SM resistors and caps. The first time I used a heat gun on a motherboard to remove a CPU I lost half a dozen unidentified components. Live and learn. That was about 20 years ago.
But creative use can also protect plastic components. I think there's a captan (?) tape or foil that is sold for the purpose as well.
These days I'm using an unbranded 853D from Ebay, which is identical to the Zeny unit we have at work. So far it's been great. I have the pencil set to 330 and the hot air set to 440. I don't usually put the hot air right up to the board, so by the time it blows through a couple inches of intervening air, it's probably considerably cooler.
We also have Weller, and the other big name that escapes me at the moment at work, but I found that more than half the time I couldn't get the soldering pencil to activate when I took it off the stand. I don't need that kind of frustration, so I got the cheap one that works.